b study b finds veterans with sud used b canna

Study Finds Veterans With SUD Used Cannabis to Alleviate Pain, Anxiety, and Improve Poor …

✦ New
CED Clinical Relevance
#72 Notable Clinical Interest
Emerging findings or policy developments worth monitoring closely.
Mental HealthPainAnxietySleepResearch
Why This Matters
If you are a veteran managing pain, anxiety, or sleep issues alongside a substance use disorder, this research supports having an honest conversation with your care team about whether supervised cannabis use could be a safer part of your recovery plan.
Clinical Summary

New research examining veterans with substance use disorders found that many turned to cannabis to manage pain, anxiety, and sleep disturbances during their treatment for non-cannabis-related SUD. This aligns with what we see clinically, where patients often use cannabis as an adjunct or alternative to more harmful substances, particularly opioids and benzodiazepines. The study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that cannabis may play a harm reduction role for certain patient populations when integrated thoughtfully into a broader treatment plan.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“Veterans have been telling us for years that cannabis helps them reduce reliance on more dangerous substances, and it is long past time that the clinical community stopped ignoring that signal and started building real protocols around it.”
Clinical Perspective

🦴 A new study characterizing veteran perspectives on cannabis use during SUD treatment confirms patterns we see daily in clinic: patients are self-selecting cannabis to manage pain, anxiety, and insomnia rather than relying solely on conventional medications with higher risk profiles. This is not about promoting cannabis as a cure for addiction but about recognizing that for many veterans, it functions as a harm reduction tool that keeps them away from opioids, alcohol, and benzodiazepines. The clinical challenge is not whether veterans are using cannabis during recovery, because they clearly are, but whether we as clinicians will step up to guide that use safely. ️ Supervised, intentional cannabis protocols could be transformative for this population if we build the frameworks to support them. Studies like this one give us the evidence base to push for exactly that kind of integration.

💬 Join the Conversation

Have a question about how this applies to your situation? Ask Dr. Caplan →

Want to discuss this topic with other patients and caregivers? Join the forum discussion →